i believe there is a fork stuck in my garbage disposal and i've tried using the hex wrench to unjam, but it won't budge. also tried sticking a stick in there to unjam it, won't budge. then put my hand down there, felt nothing sticking out and it won't budge. electrics work as it hums when i throw the switch.

water is backed up in it and there's a bunch of old grease and goo that has been sitting there while i waited for the water to trickle down. however that has come to a stop.

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i feel my last resort is to call a plumber. how much do you think he would charge for a job like this?

my other option is to buy a new disposal unit and install myself and hopefully save some money.

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if there's water in the disposal unit, and i decide to replace myself, is there any precautions i need to take so i don't get week old grease, goo, all mixed with failed draino attempts, all over myself and the kitchen floor and cabinets?

this grease is a rare form of goo that doesn't come off with degreaser. i guess some type of biological organism has grown on it or something. definitely some of the most disgusting substance i've ever had to handle.

and can anyone recommend a decent degreaser so i can cleanse myself of week old bacon grease/draino/fungus concoction?

also this stuff is pretty gunky and thick. think of a cheese after popping in the microwave for 30 seconds. that type of consistency and ultra greasy.

tried scooping as much of it out as i could, but there's a splash guard keeping me from getting all of it. and most of it is stuck to the walls of the disposal unit. still about an inch or two of water and gunk left in there.

If you can install it yourself, and that is not a given, a new disposer will cost close to what a plumber would charge. But, he might not be able to unjam it, or the disposer could be worn out to the point where it needs replacing anyway, so the decision is up to you.

yea i was considering that, but my landlord is elderly and if i could fix it for cheap, then i figured it would be a good project to deal with on my own, instead of having him stress over it. but if was costly, that's when i'd bug him.

You may be able to Boil some water and put a bunch of Dish washing Liquid into it too help devolve the grease.

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yes i actually tried that when the unit was actually draining very slowly. now it barely drains at all so i don't want to compound the amount of water in the unit. i'm going to remove/replace the unit once i find a size-for-size replacement and when enough water drains out. so as to minimize the collateral mess once i break the seal between the disposal unit and sink.

weird thing is when i stuck my hand in there and got the gunk on my hand, my extra strength degreasing dish soap had trouble getting it off my arm. which was a bit worrisome. kind of reminiscent of the gulf spill. i felt like one of those seagulls. poor birds.

WELL.....let me list the things you put into the disposal which should NEVER be there
1) grease/oil of any kind
2) degreaser
3) drano
4) fork
5) your hand

You have a mess on your hands...literally and figuratively! There is no way to avoid that when you take the disposer apart any residual water in it and in the pipes will need to be contained by a large pan. You ( or the plumber) will need to protect your eyes in case any drano splashes around. Warm soap water is the best thing to use to clean goop from your hands. However, most drain clog remover products are heavy alkalis...that will give your skin a funny feeling, and in fact can burn. Rinsing with white vinegar will help to neutralize. BUT here is the catch: we don't know what you put in the drain. SOME products are strong acids, so the treatment would be opposite. Check the label. If the main ingredient is sodium hydroxide, that is alkali.

As far as the disposer, when something like a fork gets in there , one end can work its way under the grind table, making it almost impossible to remove. You will see it better when you drop the disposal down. Good chance you will need a new unit.

IF you get the Badger 1 or 5, then please use it properly in the future: very small amounts of food, fed in slowly with LOTS of running water. NO BONES, no celery, no rice, no coffee grounds, etc. And NO GREASE AND OIL in ANY drain,

well the thing is there are two sinks. the one without the disposal unit works fine. the one with the disposal unit does not flow, or flows extremely slowly.

i believe the draino has cleared the drains as it did go down the sink, although very slowly. the clog happened maybe a day after i put the draino in. i tried running more water down that sink, and eventually it just backed up and wouldn't go down as fast. i'm not sure if it was the draino that did it, but i'm assuming so as i didn't put anything else down that drain.

i've watched the youtube videos about replacing it and in these videos, the pipes attach to the disposal unit on the front or side. under my sinks, my pipes attach to the drain unit on the back. also there is a huge water filter on the side of it. so maybe doing it myself may be a little more difficult than i thought. anybody know how much a job like this would cost me if i got a plumber? i'm in los angeles.

Now you know why plumbers go to great lengths to keep whatever in the kitchen sink from backing up into the water supply.
If you think the plumbing under a sink is bad, try cleaning out a restaurant grease trap. I use a two canister face mask for that, and rubber gloves. That stuff will be good for about seven days if it ever touches the skin.

any tips on soaking/cleaning up the grease/water mixture that's in my disposal unit? i checked the unit and i'm almost certain that if i released the seal between the unit and the sink, all that grease would spill out the side, over the unit, and onto everything in the sink cabinet. that would not be a good thing, so i'm going to try to clean out whatever's in there myself, either by spooning it out from the sink hole or soaking it up with something.

and does anyone know how much a plumber would charge to replace the unit for me? the ptrap and piping is located behind the unit and there's not much room to maneuver or see what's going on in there, as there's a water filter right next to all the piping, and the ptrap is nearly on the floor of the cabinet. every video on youtube and image i've seen has the piping to the front or side of the unit. so whoever did the initial plumbing in this unit may have screwed up.

Prices for plumbers, electricians, or any other tradesman will vary widely depending on area. That said, it seems to me you are struggling with a problem that is, to be blunt, taxing your abilities. In addition, you are messing with property that is not yours, and risking damage not only to your unit but to others as well. My advice to you is to give this to the landlord to decide on how to handle and stay out of it. And, for God's sake, in the future don't use caustic drain cleaners. As you have found, they don't work.

Changing one out varies by the brand. Some are quite easy, some more involved. Finding one that's an exact replacement may mean you don't have to change anything except the motor assembly. But, this requires both electrical, mechanical, and plumbing skills as the new one generally won't have a power cord on it, and you'll need to do that as well.

If it's one made by ISE, you don't have to change out the sink drain and the whole thing comes off fairly easily after loosening the screws, loosening the cam lock, and removing the circular split ring.

Drain cleaning chemicals often don't work and can be a major problem if you then need to take the pipes apart as they are caustic. Chemical burns or destroying tools can be an issue and a plumber may end up charging more because you did this.